DESCRIPTION

The pkeyutl command can be used to perform public key operations using any supported algorithm.

COMMAND OPTIONS

-in filename

This specifies the input filename to read data from or standard input if this option is not specified.

-out filename

specifies the output filename to write to or standard output by default.

-inkey file

the input key file, by default it should be a private key.

-keyform PEM|DER

the key format PEM, DER or ENGINE.

-passin arg

the input key password source. For more information about the format of arg see the PASS PHRASE ARGUMENTS section in openssl.

-peerkey file

the peer key file, used by key derivation (agreement) operations.

-peerform PEM|DER

the peer key format PEM, DER or ENGINE.

-engine id

specifying an engine (by its unique id string) will cause pkeyutl to attempt to obtain a functional reference to the specified engine, thus initialising it if needed. The engine will then be set as the default for all available algorithms.

-pubin

the input file is a public key.

-certin

the input is a certificate containing a public key.

-rev

reverse the order of the input buffer. This is useful for some libraries (such as CryptoAPI) which represent the buffer in little endian format.

-sign

sign the input data and output the signed result. This requires a private key.

-verify

verify the input data against the signature file and indicate if the verification succeeded or failed.

-verifyrecover

verify the input data and output the recovered data.

-encrypt

encrypt the input data using a public key.

-decrypt

decrypt the input data using a private key.

-derive

derive a shared secret using the peer key.

-hexdump

hex dump the output data.

-asn1parse

asn1parse the output data, this is useful when combined with the -verifyrecover option when an ASN1 structure is signed.

NOTES

The operations and options supported vary according to the key algorithm and its implementation. The OpenSSL operations and options are indicated below.

Unless otherwise mentioned all algorithms support the digest:alg option which specifies the digest in use for sign, verify and verifyrecover operations. The value alg should represent a digest name as used in the EVP_get_digestbyname() function for example sha1.

RSA ALGORITHM

The RSA algorithm supports encrypt, decrypt, sign, verify and verifyrecover operations in general. Some padding modes only support some of these operations however.

-rsa_padding_mode:mode

This sets the RSA padding mode. Acceptable values for mode are pkcs1 for PKCS#1 padding, sslv23 for SSLv23 padding, none for no padding, oaep for OAEP mode, x931 for X9.31 mode and pss for PSS.

In PKCS#1 padding if the message digest is not set then the supplied data is signed or verified directly instead of using a DigestInfo structure. If a digest is set then the a DigestInfo structure is used and its the length must correspond to the digest type.

For oaep mode only encryption and decryption is supported.

For x931 if the digest type is set it is used to format the block data otherwise the first byte is used to specify the X9.31 digest ID. Sign, verify and verifyrecover are can be performed in this mode.

For pss mode only sign and verify are supported and the digest type must be specified.

rsa_pss_saltlen:len

For pss mode only this option specifies the salt length. Two special values are supported: -1 sets the salt length to the digest length. When signing -2 sets the salt length to the maximum permissible value. When verifying -2 causes the salt length to be automatically determined based on the PSS block structure.

DSA ALGORITHM

The DSA algorithm supports signing and verification operations only. Currently there are no additional options other than digest. Only the SHA1 digest can be used and this digest is assumed by default.

DH ALGORITHM

The DH algorithm only supports the derivation operation and no additional options.

EC ALGORITHM

The EC algorithm supports sign, verify and derive operations. The sign and verify operations use ECDSA and derive uses ECDH. Currently there are no additional options other than digest. Only the SHA1 digest can be used and this digest is assumed by default.

EXAMPLES

Sign some data using a private key:

openssl pkeyutl -sign -in file -inkey key.pem -out sig

Recover the signed data (e.g. if an RSA key is used):

openssl pkeyutl -verifyrecover -in sig -inkey key.pem

Verify the signature (e.g. a DSA key):

openssl pkeyutl -verify -in file -sigfile sig -inkey key.pem

Sign data using a message digest value (this is currently only valid for RSA):